gather night: Chance of showers, w around 45°. crow: Rain showers, high round 680. it.. . .. kt I One hundredfive years offeditorialfreedom Wednesday September 11, 1996 V '"",;:' !: kYrgEi? 5w3G'v t w i "J"Y' 34 s ,; Sa w d ' c sr;3 f ' 'r* x s ' 3 "y s^sssv r i > , r'w';:; ::n, : , . ;. .. ^. , . K « { xer : +v . n ,S ... < .9 70 " .:., .; K i a:n y~a wi^,; .£khs ~ r :. v s... ;i .w't.;"r. s~xr.:r , sR~...i anto. ue A2M ake of rotest Jennifer Harvey aily Staff Reporter Ann Arbor city officials recently ent out two hefty bills - for $36,000 ach. One unhappy recipient, the Ku Klux Ian, said it intends to reply by slap- the city with a lawsuit. The onal Women's Rights Organizing oalition will be protesting at the next ity Council meeting. The KKK is also suing the city for 1.6 million in related damages in an dependent suit. The bills were sent to the KKK and WROC requesting reimbursement or $72,000 the city spent in relation to olicing efforts at a June 22 Klan rally nd the coinciding anti-Klan rally held he Guy C. Larcom Municipal ding. "I ultimately made the decision after onsulting with the city attorney," City dministrator Neil Berlin said yester- y. "(The billing) has nothing to do ith what (the groups) said. It has to do 4ih actions." Berlin said there was a lot of vio- ence at the rally that extended past the egis of freedom of speech rights, r which both groups said they ral- ie . Berlin said the city relied on olice officers' reports and eye wit- esses' accounts to determine the illing amounts. "The billing is based on a review of he actions of both groups," City ttorney Abigail Elias said. "We feel e're justified under the circumstances nd given the actions of both groups." Klan National Imperial Wizard Jeff said in a telephone interview last t that a Klan lawsuit against the city s imminent. "(The city) just opened heir doors to a lawsuit," he said. '"We're going to slap a $1.6 million awsuit on them for letting somebody st my wife's head open" Berry's wife, Edna, was the only Ian member treated for injuries after he rally. She was hospitalized after a ock hit her in the head. rry said he plans to file an addi- al lawsuit for freedom of speech iolations stemming from the billing. It's against the constitution. Nowhere n the United States has any black, wish, Japanese or white American een charged for a rally. We have a 'ght to freedom of speech and peace- l assembly." Lawyers for the Klan have set the egal paperwork in motion, Berry said. e also said he expects to talk to Ann r city officials about the matter See KLAN, Page 9 S' to overhaul campus life WARREN ZINN/Daily Students in the Alice Lloyd Residence Scholars Program attend classes such as this one, Politics and Criminal Law. Not only does the class take place in the dorm, but the teachers live there as well, making them easily accessible to students. Administrators lan new dorm, Hill diinghallIn extensiVe expansion Students to live and learn By Jodi S. Cohen Daily Staff Reporter First-year students spend hours each day in residence hall; They go there to eat, sleep or spend time with friends. But a report released to The Michigan Daily yesterday may provide the best evidence that residence halls could soon be a place where all first-year students can not only socialize, but also learn. The living-learning programs task force report outlines a plan for I I programs by fall 1998. Currently, about 1,600 students are enrolled in one of six programs, including the Residential College and the 21st Century Program. "Living-learning communities are the next big trend in undergraduate education," said LSA senior Randall Juip, president of the Residence Halls Association and member of the task force. Juip said moving education away from the traditional classroom "will provide a lot of services to first-year stu- dents." According to the report, the programs will give stu- dents small seminar-format classes, study groups, academic advising and peer mentoring - all within the residence halls. The 17-member task force was appointed about a year ago by Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen lartford. She formed the committee after a report, "A Michigan Education" called for changes in undergraduate education, including the chance for all first-year students to be part of a living-learning community. "In this report, you see 30 years of academic interest in liv- ing-learning communities," said Juip, referring to research done in the 1960s that prompted the creation of the Pilot Program and the Residential College. Auter a year of meetings, the task force's final proposal calls for each community to be theme-based according to the residence hall's location on campus. The Bursley program, "Invention and Creativity,' corre- sponds with the North Campus focus on engineering, art and music, whereas the Couzens Hall program, "Society and Health,' will be near University Hospitals and the School of Public Health. "We wanted to make sure the themes might attract students with similar interests but they were broad enough so that peo- ple from any discipline could be comfortable in any of these programs," said William Zeller, director of Housing and chair of the task force. While original proposals suggested that all first-year stu- dents be required to join a program, the final report recom- mends that participation be voluntary. "I honestly think things work better if they're not manda- tory,' Hartford said. "Living in residence halls are not mandatory, but 98 percent do. It's what works for students." Juip said the committee changed its proposal after solicit- ing student input. "The overwhelming response was no, they should not be mandatory," Juip said. "We decided students would realize the merit of the programs and they wouldn't have to be mandatory." The programs will run for two to three years as "test-mar- kets" to gauge student interest and reaction, Zeller said. Space will be reserved in each dorm for students who don't want to be part of a living-learning community. It's the task force's hope, however, that the "norm" will be for students to join a program, Zeller said. See REPORT, Page 9 By Jodi S. Cohen Daily Staff Reporter With living-learning programs looking to expand in the next few years, administrators say other extensive changes will occur as a result. The report proposes the creation of new facilities in addition to the living-learning communities, including two buildings: a large dining center in the Hill area and an additional residence hall near West Quad.. The dining center, which would be located near Palmer Field, would eliminate smaller facilities in four Hill dorms. Mary Markley residence hall would retain its facility. "This is one of the greatest things housing can do' said LSA senior Randall Juip, presi- dent of the Residence Halls Association. "It's going to be absolutely incredible." The air-conditioned "modern" facility, with new technology and many food choices, will be in-tune with "1996 not 1976," said Alan Levy, director of Housing public affairs. "All dining halls were built at a time when you would go down a cafeteria line," he said. "This building would be built to handle the volume of people." The idea for a more modern dining center developed during brainstorming sessions on liv- ing-learning communities. Combining the din- ing centers would free up about 40,000-50.000 square feet of space in the residence halls, said William Zeller, director of Housing. The space could then be made into classrooms and offices. And at the same time, students would get better dining services, Juip said. "The perennial complaints with residence' halls is that the food sucks," Juip said. "When this opens in 1999, no student will complain about variety." Zeller said a similar facility is being consid- ered for the Central Campus residence halls. Juip said he also hopes the dining center will have meeting and conference rooms for stu- dent organizations. The report also mentions the idea of build- ing a new residence hall that would be created as a living-learning facility. Bursley, built in the 1960s, is the newest residence hall. "These are still far-down-the-road ideas," Living-learning, commnities 4i' t K Bursley..................Invention and Creativity Mary Markley.......21st Century Program* Couzens .....................Society and Health Alice Uoyd -..............Lloyd Hail Scholars PrografV Mo-Jo or Barbour-Newberry...........UROP Mosher-Jordan.........Science and Mathematics Mosher-Jordan ......Women in Science and Engineering' Stockwell...............Gender and Leadership South Quad........................Democracy and Diversity East Quad.......Residential College* Barbour-Newberry or Mosher-Jordan Honors Program* Zeller said. derores eaiting pwgram erot boat DALLAS (AP) -- Snu ral established political earch for a running mat icked economist Pat Cho o share his Reform Part icket, calling him "a pe ect, courage, integrity an Choate is a protection trong Perot ally in oppos merican Free Trade Ag Perot's coach for FTA debate the Tex xecutive had with Vice ore. "He knows the system Perot said, announcing hi 30-minute infomercial o knows what's wrong with hat's wrong with it. - our views out there acro For his part, the cam ate said he joined arty ticket because gove e reformed "from the in "It cannot be changed b wo major political partie ate said. "Too many peo much at public expense." settles for eas V ibbed by sev- show guest during the NAFTA debate. figures in his Perot's poll standing has plummeted e, Ross Perot in recent months to the point where he gate yesterday now gets roughly 5 percent in national y presidential surveys - well off the 19 percent of rson of intel- the vote he garnered in 1992. An ABC d grit." News poll released Monday, for exam- ist and was a ple, showed Clinton with 53 percent, ing the North Republican Bob Dole with 38 percent greement. He and Perot with 5 percent. In polls since a televised Aug. 27, Clinton has averaged 52 per- xas business cent, Dole 38 percent. Perot hasn't been President Al in double digits since mid-August. This shaky political standing appar- a as few do," ently made it hard for Perot to attract a is choice in a major political figure to share the n CBS. "He Reform Party ticket. it. We agree In his hunt for a running mate, Perot is views are twice made overtures to University of ss America." Oklahoma President David Boren, a paign novice Democrat, but the former governor and Perot's third- U.S. senator said he didn't want the job. ernment can't Democratic Marcy Kaptur (R-Ohio) side." also declined an offer. She and Perot see y either of the eye-to-eye on NAFTA and other eco- s," the candi- nomic issues. Rep. Linda Smith (R- ple profit too Washington), an outspoken advocate of dramatic campaign finance reforms, also , . 2 --A - -- e -a a I1. Senate bill to prevent same-sex # marnages The Washington Post WASHINGTON - The Senate overwhelmingly approved legislation yesterday that is designed to prevent gay marriages, sending the election- year measure to President Clinton and a promised signature, while narrowly defeating another bill that would have outlawed job discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. After a relatively subdued day-long debate on the two measures, the Senate voted 85 to 14 to approve the same-sex marriage bill and then defeated the job- discrimination bill by the narrowest of margins, 50 to 49, in the first vote Congress has had on the issue. Sen. James Jeffords (R-Vt.) a co- sponsor of the employment-discrimina- tion bill, said the difference in the two votes was an accurate gauge of Americans' readiness to accept gay relationships as opposed to their will- {II W I